45 N.Y. 665 | NY | 1871
It was irregular to include, in the judgment of affirmance given upon the appeal, the amount of the judgment of the court below, thus making it a judgment for the amount of that judgment and the costs of the appeal. (Eno v. Crooke, 6 How. Pr., 462;De Agreda v. Mantel, 1 Abb. Pr., 130; Halsey v. Flint,
15 id., 367.) But the plaintiff in the action having entered the judgment in that form, there can be no doubt but that payment of the amount thereof would operate not only as a satisfaction of such judgment, but of the judgment below included therein. It follows that, if the acknowledgment of satisfaction executed and acknowledged by Miller and delivered to the plaintiff's attorney, was a valid discharge of the judgment entered upon the affirmance, he was entitled to judgment in this action requiring the defendants to cancel of record the judgment appealed from, and also the judgment that was ordered to stand as security upon setting aside the inquest and directing a reference of the action for trial, in which proceeding the judgment appealed from was recovered. The assignment by Hendrickson, the plaintiff, of the first judgment recovered to Callaghan Miller included the claim upon which it was recovered, and which merged in the judgment, so that when the court ordered such judgment to stand as a security for any recovery that might be had in the trial ordered by the court, they had the like interest in the judgment recovered upon such trial, that they had in the judgment assigned to them. The question is, whether the acknowledgment of satisfaction *669
by Miller operated as a discharge in whole or in part of the judgment entered upon the affirmance of the judgment recovered upon the trial upon the appeal therefrom. That judgment was upward of $2,000. Miller, upon payment to him of $200, acknowledged satisfaction of this judgment in the names of Callaghan Miller, the attorneys for the plaintiff therein, and delivered the same to the defendant, or for his use to the clerk of the court, who canceled the docket of the judgment. This was not a valid discharge, if the only right of Miller to do the act was that of attorney in the case for the plaintiff. An attorney is not authorized by his retainer to satisfy a judgment without payment, and if he does so, the court will set such satisfaction aside. (Lewis v. Woodruff, 15 How. Pr., 539.) But it is claimed by the plaintiff that Callaghan Miller were the owners of the judgment, and that although, as the attorney of the plaintiff, he could not satisfy it without payment, yet as owner he might, and that the discharge should be regarded as executed by him as owner as well as attorney. If Miller had been the absolute owner of the judgment, the position of the counsel would be correct. His undertaking, though as attorney, would be held binding upon him as owner and the judgment released. It is insisted by the counsel for the defendant that Miller having received $200 only as a consideration for the discharge, it could only operate to extinguish that amount, conceding him to have been owner of the judgment. The counsel relies in support of this position upon the well settled rule that an agreement to receive a part of a debt already due, in satisfaction of the whole, and payment of such part is not valid as an accord and satisfaction of the debt, and constitutes no defence to an action for the recovery of the residue of the debt. This rule never was applied to a release or other discharge of the debt by an instrument under seal. This distinction arose from the fact that at common-law a seal was conclusive evidence of an adequate consideration for a contract. This rule was changed by section 77 (2 R.S., 407), which provides that the seal *670
shall only be presumptive evidence of a sufficient consideration, which may be rebutted in the same manner and to the same extent as if such instrument were not sealed. Notwithstanding the abolition by statute of the common-law rule, upon which it was based, the distinction has been preserved; and it is still held that a release, under seal, from a debt, given upon payment of a part, constitutes a valid defence to an action for the residue. (Carrington v. Crocker,
The judgment must be modified by declaring that the plaintiff is entitled to have the three judgments satisfied, on paying what shall be due after deducting $500, which was Miller's interest, and, as so modified, affirmed, without costs in this court to either party.
All agreeing. Judgment accordingly.